Best processors 2017: top CPUs for your PC

The competition is now heated once again in the space inhabited by the best processors. Previously thought to reign indisputably as our newfound champion, AMD Ryzen is now rivaled by Intel’s 8th-generation Coffee Lake CPUs, which now sport more cores and threads than their 7th-generation Kaby Lake equivalents.

As the race to make the best processors continues to run rampant, however, things become a little more complicated in terms of pricing and availability. While Intel might offer more bang for the buck right now going by the manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP) alone, it’s hard to find a Coffee Lake processor at launch that hasn’t been price gouged to death by the retailer.

In the ever present war of AMD vs Intel, who triumphs?

Luckily, if you can’t wait, there are plenty of still-good Intel Kaby Lake and AMD Ryzen CPUs to choose from right now. Granted, you’ll want to make sure you have the proper best motherboard paired with whichever chip you decide on, else you’ll be risking incompatibility between components. As a key reminder, AM4 is AMD and Z270 is Kaby Lake.

Coffee Lake, on the other hand, introduces an entirely new chipset despite maintaining a similar socket type. So, if you do opt for an 8th-gen Intel CPU, you’ll need a Z370 motherboard to go along with it and, of course, they’re not easy to get your hands on right now. For that reason, we’ve sorted through two Lakes and a Ryzen to find only the best processors you can buy.

When Intel contended we would see its best gaming processor ever amid the 8th-generation Coffee Lake-S launch, it wasn’t wrong. This ’K’ series chip beats out AMD’s best in nearly every way imaginable. Ditching the company’s invisible rule to keep processors donning over four cores out of the hands of the mainstream, the i7-8700K makes hexa-core the new black.

Read our full review: Intel Core i7-8700K

When AMD dropped its Zen architecture-based Ryzen chips earlier this year, they thrived on the promise of a price-to-performance ratio that knock Intel’s socks off. At the same time, however, they failed to touch Intel in terms of sheer horsepower. That all changed with the AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X, a chunk of silicon that’s not only a better value than Intel’s Core i9-7900X, but it’s also easier to anchor into the socket of any x399 motherboard.

Read the full review: AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X

It’s no surprise that with its mid-range chip, AMD offers more cores for less money when compared to Intel. While in year’s past this has equated to making compromises in other areas to keep the costs low, the Ryzen 5 1600X remains economical without being shown up. After all, operating with six cores and 12 threads, there’s no shame in a 3.6GHz base frequency, not to mention the 4.0GHz boost in addition to overclocking capabilities.

Read the full review: AMD Ryzen 5 1600X

Considering you will need a discrete GPU to use it, there will always be the assumption that the AMD Ryzen 3 1300X is built for gaming. Once you see past your prejudices, though, you’ll see it as the little processor that could. That’s because, at a price that’s hard to refuse, you’re getting a chip that’s 53% faster at encoding video than the Intel Core i3-7350K in Handbrake and – with the right GPU attached – can easily help you attain 60 frames per second in Overwatch.

Read the full review: AMD Ryzen 3 1300X

Like the 7700K that preceded it on this list, the Intel Core i5-7600K is an unlocked, overclockable quad-core processor from Intel. However, it also suffers from the same integral shortcoming; that is that it’s barely an upgrade over the i5-6600K. Be that as it may, squeezing out only 300MHz over its precursor brings it nearly in line with the last-gen Core i7-6700K when overclocked. All the while, it won’t put too much of a dent in your budget either.

The primary contender to Intel’s Core i7-7700K, the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X poses a convincing threat to Intel’s flagship. While it’s unfortunately more expensive than the 7700K, uncharacteristic for the oft value-focused Red Team, the Ryzen 7 1800X most certainly keeps up with some of Intel’s older chips. Plus, unlike the Core i7-5960X and -6700K it most intimately rivals, the AMD Ryzen 7 1800X is much more qualified for VR now and into the future.

Read the full review: AMD Ryzen 7 1800X

The naming convention is confusing, given that the Intel Core i7-7820X is part of Intel’s “Skylake-X” series rather than the X-class chips built on the 14nm Kaby Lake node, but semantics matter very little when you get to go hands-on with an Intel CPU boasting this many cores. Although the fact that you’ll need a new motherboard to use this octa-core monster might be enough to scare some users off to Ryzen, Intel loyalists shan’t mind the upgrade.

Intel's 18-core processor is all about brute force. With the ability to kick up all of its cores to 4.8GHz (by our testing at least), this monstrous CPU brings performance to a new level of insanity. The only caveats are this processor power draw and price are equally beastly.

Read the full review: Intel Core i9-7980XE

With the amount of money you’ll save by purchasing the Intel Pentium G4560 over a Core i3 chip, we promise you won’t mind the ever-so-slight loss in performance you can expect from this hardy value chip. As the first Pentium processor in quite some time to feature hyper-threading, the G4560 goes out of its way to show us all what we’ve been missing. And, in benchmarks, it proves itself eerily adjacent to the more expensive Intel Core i3-7100.

Maybe you’ve probably heard some bad things about the AMD A12-9800, some of which are justified, but some salty impressions we’ve seen are just based on how AMD’s first AM4-compatible APUs aren’t Zen-based. Instead, the A12-9800 takes advantage of the Bristol Ridge architecture, which is basically just a refresh of the Bulldozer family AMD has been slowly iterating on since 2011. Even so, this is the best way single AMD chip build independent of a discrete GPU – for now.